Chapter 1556--2008.5.17

As it was a hot day during the height of summer, the air conditioner, operating as a mild dehumidifier, was humming.

Though she was in a nice and cool room, Ayumi was sweating.

Chapter 1557--2008.5.18

The sweat dripped down her body in beads, under her clothes, until her brassiere, which compressed her breasts, caught it and became soaked.

"We. . . ll. . ."

It took a very long time to say just one word, but Satori, the only viewer and the cause of her transformation, did not say anything.

Chapter 1558--2008.5.19

"I."

Her soprano voice spoke "I" normally, generally considered as a first singular masculine personal pronouns.

". . . Well?"

Satori, for now a boy, was disappointed.

"I was in that mood."

Ayumi's mind was going to say it like this and thus commanded her body. At least she thought so.

But the words her body spoke were;

"Well, I was in a mood like that."

. . . What!!

Chapter 1559--2008.5.20

Just this once, both of them ware too surprised to stay calm.

Ayumi was possessed by incongruities she had never experienced, to speak improper words that she did not intend to say.

She felt chills running through her back, like a chunk of ice going down from her head, through her arteries in her back, to her rear end.

". . . Brother? . . . Now, what did you say?"

Chapter 1560--2008.5.21

"Ah, well. . . but. . ."

I feel at a loss for a reply about the confirmation.

Nowadays, only, say, effeminate men use the stereotyped "inflections for women", I think.

First of all, "word-changes for women" are peculiar to Japanese.

"Word-changes for women" are made by adding ending-particles called "Shu-Joshi", such as "wa", "yo", or "kashira"; and interestingly, "Shu-Joshi" are particles "that do not change the meanings of the sentence".

1:The original word is "Ore" (pronoused as "Oh-le"), the most masculine first person singular pronoun.↑